HFPA leadership also briefly addressed the criticism onstage. “We have our own work to do … we must have black journalists in our organization,” said a German member. Another echoed the association’s statement to the Times earlier this week and said the association looked forward “to a more inclusive future”.
Criticism of the HFPA’s lack of diversity coursed throughout the evening, from comedic jabs (“Thank you to the all-white Hollywood Foreign Press,” said Sacha Baron Cohen, accepting for best film comedy Borat Subsequent Moviefilm) to earnest calls for reform. Actor, activist, and Hollywood legacy legend Jane Fonda accepted the Cecil B DeMille award for lifetime achievement with a pointed call to industry leaders to support diverse storytelling.
“[There’s] a story we’ve been afraid to see and hear about ourselves in this industry,” she said. “A story about which voices we respect and elevate and which we tune out, a story about who’s offered a seat at the table and who’s kept out of the rooms where decisions are made.
Fonda called on Hollywood, “including the groups that decide who gets hired and what gets made and who wins awards,” to be leaders and “make an effort to expand that tent so everyone rises and everyone’s story has a chance to be seen and heard.”
Time’s Up’s president and CEO, Tina Tchen, responded quickly to the ceremony. “The HFPA’s statements tonight and over the last several days indicate a fundamental lack of understanding of the depth of the problems at hand,” she said in a letter. “Your stated version of change is cosmetic – find black people. That is not a solution.”